From

In residence at

Host scientist

PROJECT

Spray combustion: on the vaporization process of micro droplets

Spray/Droplets formation and combustion are the processes which control combustion efficiency and emissions of power generation systems such as gas turbines, diesel engines, and other industrial burners. In the combustion chamber of these systems, upon its injection, liquid fuel breaks up into droplets to increase the mixing between the oxidant/air and fuel but more importantly to ease and enhance the vaporization (gasification) process of liquid fuel and hence the overall combustion performance. Therefore, understanding these processes is crucial for the design and development of these systems in order to meet the ever increasing stringent emissions limitations. Although the vaporization characteristics of a liquid fuel injected into a gaseous environment/ambient have been studied extensively in the open literature, there still remain many challenges. For instance, most of published research on liquid fuel gasification was based droplets that are way larger than those encountered in real combustion chambers. This is especially due to the technical difficulties in developing test rigs capable of replicating realistic conditions (e.g., droplet size, droplet surroundings composition and state and flow character – laminar or turbulent). An understanding of the interplay between these parameters when it comes to liquid fuel vaporization is lacking. This is why currently used computer codes employed by industry for modeling and designing spray combustion still rely on untested approximations especially on the effect of gas phase turbulence. The research project outlined below will lead to significant scientific advances where new knowledge and comprehensive data at realistic test conditions will be generated. The findings of this research will greatly aid the combustion research community to construct high fidelity computer simulation codes for modeling spray combustion and consequently benefit the industry in designing more efficient and less pollutant power generation systems.